Category: Victor Akande

  • BET to show 2017 MOBO Awards highlights

    A one-hour highlights show of the prestigious 22nd annual MOBO Awards will broadcast for the first time on BET (DStv channel 129) on Saturday, 23 December at 7.00pm.

    The awards took place at First Direct Arena in Leeds, UK, and provided an electrifying evening of live performances and appearances from top artists and entertainers. Performers included afrobeats superstar Davido, who recently walked away with the Best African Act award and was a co-winner of the Worldwide Act award at the 2017 MTV Europe Music Awards held in London last month. Billboard’s #1 US star Cardi B, who received 5 wins at the BET “HIP HOP AWARDS” 2017 in October, Hip Hop titans Krept & Konan, man of the moment Stormzy, hotly tipped rising rap star Stefflon Don also took to the stage to enthral concert goers.

    “We are excited to partner with BET to broadcast this year’s MOBO Awards,” said Kanya King, MOBO Founder and CEO.

    “This year was an exciting show befitting of the outstanding talent and music we have seen in the past year. It is a very exciting and significant time for black music, and we produced a really special evening of celebrating this cultural movement.”

    Alex Okosi, Executive Vice President & Managing Director Viacom International Media Networks Africa and BET International said: “As a brand that celebrates Black excellence in music, entertainment, news and culture, BET International is thrilled to partner with the MOBO organization to broadcast this year’s award show. We recognize the contribution the show has played in elevating many UK and International Artists and their music and we look forward to a continued partnership.”

  • ‘Autistic kids can be artistes’

    ‘Autistic kids can be artistes’

    The Talent in Autism, a program which showcases the talent and the abilities of children living with Autism held its 9th edition on Sunday at The Incubator, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Organised by the Patrick Speech and Language Centre, the programs saw children with special needs thrill guests with performances ranging from drama, drumming to presenting among other skills.

    Organiser of the event, Mrs Dotun Akande, said: “A lot of people believe they can’t socialize, they can’t read but you could see some of them reading, writing, presenting and doing different things. That’s why we want the parents to know that no matter the age, our children do well.

    “We are investing in their talents of course; we want them to be somebody. We want people to see what they can do then take it up from there.

    “They can be singers, they can be drummer, pianists , they can play in your church, they can play at your events.

    “One of the talents we have here is Mojamz who has a band; they were the ones that were thrilling us all through the day. You can have them present at birthday parties- that is why we showcase them.

    “We introduce them to programs. For instance, one of our children played at the Lagos State disability conference. He played our national anthem and he was paid.”

    She also advised parents of children living with autism to encourage the talent in them.

    “We have children that can play, we have choreographers, we have painting, we have playing of instrument, we have drama and we have dancing. So you can see that our children have numerous talents.”

    Akande however, revealed that “there is no special treatment for autism. What to do is therapy, teach them consistently.”

  • Omotola, Ali Nuhu, Imasuen  get BON Awards

    Omotola, Ali Nuhu, Imasuen get BON Awards

    The ninth edition of the Best of Nollywood ( BON ) Awards holds today, Saturday, December 16, at the Cultural Centre, Abeokuta, Ogun state.

    This year’s edition which will be hosted by the Senator Ibikunle Amosun-led Ogun State government will have Kannywood sensation, Rahama Sadau and Tinsel star cum model, Gbenro Ajibade, act as comperes while Jaywon and other artistes would perform at the ceremony.

    “The current administration in Ogun State is proud to be identified with this event and we promise to give all the needed support to ensure that this year’s edition is an even greater success story,” Dayo Adeneye, Commissioner for Information and Strategy, said.

    And with expectant nominees straddling different categories, the trio of Omotola Jalade-Ekehinde, Ali Nuhu and filmmaker, Lancelot Oduwa Imasuen, are the recipients of the Best of Nollywood Awards 2017 Special Recognition award.

    Speaking on the Special Recognition Award, the executive producer, Seun Oloketuyi said, “Every year, we take it upon ourselves to recall the sacrifices and strides of those elders whose arts and artistry have catalysed the growth and global acceptance that Nollywood enjoys today. We don’t want to wait until these veterans are dead to give them posthumous awards, which is why we have decided to celebrate them while they are still alive and active. Besides, this year’s honourees are a source of inspiration to young actors and budding filmmakers across Nigeria and beyond.”

    Meanwhile, leading telecommunications company, Airtel, according to Oloketuyi, has thrown its weight behind this year’s awards ceremony.

    “We are happy to have Airtel on board this year. We hope the partnership would be even more mutually beneficial in the years ahead,” Oloketuyi said.

  • Gains and pains of revolutionary filmmaking

    Gains and pains of revolutionary filmmaking

    It is always interesting to be a participant at film festivals, where filmmakers, enthusiasts, and entrepreneurs, apart from the film screenings and networking, take time out to share experiences of their local film industries, and learn something about the different film environments across the world.

    It was at one of those industry sessions at the just concluded Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF), that film was discussed as a tool of diplomacy.

    Julien Ezanno, Aide Aux Cinemas due Monde at CNC who talked about the possibility of Nigeria entering into co-production with France, opened the discussion on how filmmakers can relay sensitive information without offending the sensibilities of government and the people.

    The panel had Charles Novia recalling how Nollywood started at a time when Nigeria was under the military government, and how some of its narratives had aided the return of democracy in Nigeria. Unfortunately, it has not been a walk in the park for filmmakers to air their critique of politics and the public service under the current democratic dispensation.

    While Novia also blamed the dearth of revolutionary filmmaking on the laziness of filmmakers to employ literary allusions in bringing government heresies to the fore, Obi Asika noted that, apart from the fact that government may frown at its critics, there is a lot of self-censorship going by our cultural orientation. According to him, the world seems to have run out of original story ideas, thus, many hide under the excuse of institutional censorship. “If you have any story to tell, tell it, and don’t be afraid,” he said.

    Prompted by this discussion, I realised that, in actual fact, Nigerian films of today are deficient in record of satire, as we had among the earlier filmmakers. Even using film as direct confrontation to bad governance is a rarity. One can only wonder how much references would be available of revolutionary films, if the late Afrobeat founder, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti was a filmmaker.

    In the face of harsh government policy and censorship of motion picture works, filmmakers in other clans, as I often say, have found their voice in exile. This was what many thought Ishaya Bako would do when his documentary, ‘Fuelling Poverty’ was outlawed by the government of Nigeria through the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB).

    Bako was probably silenced by patriotic spirit. He would do nothing further like route a revolutionary film at international film festivals or go into a co-production with foreign agencies just to wash the country’s dirty linen on the global stage.

    Well, let’s just say that what works for one man may not work for another. Otherwise, Sudanese filmmaker, Hajooj Kuka, wouldn’t have ‘defeated’ Omar al-Bashir at the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) in 2015.

    It was one of those cases of film in exile and it earned Kuka a reward when his documentary film, ‘Beats of the Antonov’, which depicts al-Bashir, not just as the kind of leader who drops bombs on unarmed civilians, but also as a racist who divides his country along racial and ethnic lines, won the Artwatch Africa laurel.

    The artiste has been winning awards for the daring film that shows the vicious treatment the citizens are facing in the hands of the country’s leader.

    That showcase at DIFF, occurred barely a month after Omar al-Bashir escaped detention in South Africa, following International Criminal Court (ICC)’s order.

    However, Kuka’s documentary says it all, giving a human face to al-Bashir’s victims at that Durban film fest and earning nods from viewers and judges at the festival. His plaque was accompanied by a R15, 000 cash prize (equivalent of N234, 230 then) in honour of an African film that meaningfully engages with issues of Freedom of Expression.

    Let’s take a look at another fighter; the embattled Iranian filmmaker, Jafar Panahi, who won the Golden Bear at Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) few years back, for his Tehran road movie, Taxi, which critics described as a victory for freedom of speech and the art of cinematic storytelling.

    The dissident filmmaker, who was banned from making films by the Iranian authorities and forbidden from travelling abroad, starred in his own film as a taxi driver, talking to his passengers as he drives them through the streets of Tehran.

    Berlinale’s decision to celebrate Panahi didn’t stem from a perception of affront to the filmmaker’s country.

    “Instead of allowing his spirit to be crushed and giving up, instead of allowing himself to be filled with anger and frustration, Jafar Panahi created a love letter to cinema,” said Darren Aronofsky, the American director and Berlinale jury president. “His film is filled with love for his art, his community, his country and his audience.”

    Although committed to a six-year prison term and a 20-year ban from filmmaking by the Iranian government, the filmmaker has continued to be celebrated on the international stage.

    I can recall that Panahi’s film, ‘Offside’, won the Berlin festival’s Silver Bear award in 2006 and in 2011. But he was prevented from attending the ceremonies because he could not get bail to attend.

    His film, ‘Taxi’, was the first after his jail term, which again, has been described as his courage against his 20-year ban from filmmaking.

    Well, I see more of a politicised film industry in the democratic setting, especially one that has enriched some Nollywood filmmakers from the loot of public office holders, as a result of which the revolutionary spirit may have been fed fat and unmoving.

  • Year of Nigeria’s box office earnings

    THERE was a resurgence of the cinema going culture in Nigeria in May 2004 with the establishment of Silverbird Cinema at the Silverbird Galleria, Victoria Island, Lagos, but at the time, Hollywood films dominated the exhibition space largely because Nollywood had maintained a direct-to-home production through the sales of CDs and DVDs, and a last distribution chain being Africa Magic on DStv.

    While the home video business held sway, another factor that made Nigerian films somewhat unfit for the cinemas was the low quality of production which produces hazy pictures on the big screen, until ‘Through the Glass’ a project by Stephanie Okereke-Linus who just return from the New York Film Academy in 2007 opened the floodgate for other filmmakers who began to use upgraded equipment in order for their films to be accepted by cinema owners.

    Although ‘Through the Glass’ did not achieve much commercial success, having made about N13 million in three weeks of exhibition, the next remarkable Nigerian production, ‘The Figurine’ (2009), by Kunle Afolayan endeared more people to the cinemas, thus the film made about N25million. There was a notable progression in box office earnings, as a project project, ‘Ije-The Journey’ (2010) by another Nigerian filmmaker, Chineze Anyaene, who also attended the New York Film Academy recorded N59 million, showcasing in five cinemas across three Nigerian cities. It was the first time a Nigerian movie was making such earning. And this brought hope to many who began to see the cinema as a way of outsmarting pirates who are known to feat on DVDs even before their original owners have released them to the market. For a long time, ‘Ije’ became a reference point for possibility. And the producer, among other things harped on robust publicity budget as her success factor.

    When in 2012, the first Filmhouse Cinema was opened in Surulere, hope for more earnings rose, but for a while, none was able to beat the record of ‘Ije’. However, Kunle Afolayan’s ‘Phone Swap’ (2012) was an improvement on ‘The Figurine’, having made about N30million in the cinemas. Again, Afolayan’s ‘October 1’ ( 2014) was an improvement on his previous work with more than N35million box office sales apart from about N60million it clinched through the filmmaker’s private screening initiative.

    In the same year, there was another unprecedented bumper earning by first-time feature film producer, Ayo Makun whose film made N100million. By this time, Filmhouse’s strategic development plan to roll-out 25 cinemas over a six year period had yielded about 60 percent, added to the likes of Viva Cinema in Ibadan and Ilorin, Kada Cinema in Benin, Dews Cinema in FESTAC Town, Royal Cinema in Alimosho, 5D Cinema 9Ja in Port-Harcourt and Genesis Deluxe Owerri among a few others.

    Interestingly, the exploits of Nigerian films in the cinemas in the last few years have been particularly remarkable. While ‘The CEO’ by Kunle Afolayan made well over N60million and ‘Wives on Strike’ by Omoni Oboli raked about N71million, ‘A Trip to Jamaica by Ayo Makun was said to have made N160million. And while promoters where still celebrating that as the highest grossing film in Nigeria last year, ‘The Wedding Party’ directed by Kemi Adetiba grossed N36million in its opening weekend alone, while ”76′, a film on the Nigerian military coup and directed by Izu Ojukwu and ‘Three Wise Men’ by Opa Williams have had their cinema figures kept under wraps.

    The record booster for ‘The Wedding Party’, which critics have rated low in some quarters, is such that it opened on the same weekend with Hollywood Sci-Fi, ‘Rogue One – a Star Wars story, and edged it off the way.

    With the current development, it is safe to say that Nigerian films, in the last three years have improved tremendously in box office performances, lending credence to the 2015 report by leading audit firm, Pricewaterhouse Coopers (PwC) which put the worth of Nigerian entertainment and media industry at more than US$4 billion annually, with the prediction that by 2019, the market will be more than twice as big, with estimated total revenue of US$8.1 billion.

  • WHEN CELEBRITIES TAX THEIR GOODWILL

    LIFE is indeed sweet. And no matter the sorrows within, living is sacred. Thus, it is believed that those who took their lives have not explored every option available to remain alive.

    It is true that no man begged to come to this world, but fighting to remain alive is an obligation that comes with earthly responsibilities. No matter how we choose to look at it, these responsibilities demand that we live, not just for ourselves, but for others, including the Creator, that we may serve Him until such a time when it pleases Him to call us home.

    Several people are dying around the world because they do not have the opportunity to stay longer than they desire. But there are others who, by virtue of their position in the society, will enjoy public concerns and sympathy when in distress. Celebrities fall in the latter category, which is why we have instances of public donations to ailing actors and musicians. In some cases, governments, politicians and corporate organisations have risen to the occasion to offset medical bills of celebrities. In view of the goodwill that celebrities enjoy, some of them have also used their clout to influence charity towards ordinary people who are in need. But at what point did the goodwill they enjoy become a right?

    We all have served our fatherland in different capacities, but I have not seen people in other professions arrogate so much national importance to their services like the entertainers. Yes, not even the soldiers. And I ask; were those services rendered for free?

    We pay to see movies in cinemas; we pay to enjoy music at concerts, even when we are not paying, some companies are paying as part of their social responsibility projects. No doubt, we enjoy the movies, the music, and football. We have created a fan base for you among ourselves. We have even made role models of you, sometimes for the wrong reasons.

    Our children idolize you, they scramble for selfies and autographs at the sight of you. When you are sick and in need of help, we give our widow’s mite, just to keep you going for us. But when did these privileges you enjoy become a right? The kind of rights that farmers never claim for feeding us, the kind that soldiers never claim for fighting our battles, the kind that doctors never claim for saving lives, the kind that engineers never claim for giving our lives a spark.

    I have often quarreled with a mindset among some entertainers who feel that government owe them a huge debt for developing the creative industry without its (government) support, forgetting for a moment that it is a personal profit-making business they are engaged in. Footballers too have held government by the jugular, for what they consider a national service on the pitch of play.

    The carry-over effect is that when these celebrities suffer personal losses, they still expect government or the public to pay damages. Whatever happens to their salaries, allowances and personal savings?

    A celebrity who was reported recently to be suffering life-threatening sicknesses has called the bluff of everyone who should help because he does not want to be seen as begging to stay alive. The seeming arrogance stems from his long service to the nation, for which there are no accounts of being owed salaries or performing for free.

    There have been such cases where initially, a celebrity keeps their health status in secrecy, dispelling reports about their indisposition until it becomes late.

    I thought they say that a man drowning does not care who saves him. We must fight to stay alive, even if it requires begging. Begging to live is different from begging to feed; only God gives the former, so there is no shame in asking.

    Banky W was happy he got another chance to live. Many of us have been given multiple chances and we appreciate life better.

    “For those who’ve been wondering why I’ve been away so long; I had my third surgery on a rare strain of skin cancer tumours in my shoulder last month,” said Banky W.

    According to him, “The first two times were over ten years ago, then it recently resurfaced. But this isn’t a sad story as much as it is a reminder and a testimony.

    A reminder that you should never take life for granted.”

    Yes, we should never take life for granted. We treat it like a trash when we don’t bother if we lose it, by feeling too big to keep it, no matter what it takes.

  • At AFRIFF, talks on revolutionary filmmaking get a slot

    IT is always interesting to be a participant at film festivals, where filmmakers, enthusiasts, and entrepreneurs, apart from the film screenings and networking, take time out to share experiences of their local film industries, and learn something about the different film environments across the world.

    It was at one of those industry sessions at the Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF) which ended today, that film was discussed as a tool of diplomacy.

    Julien Ezanno, Aide Aux Cinemas due Monde at CNC who talked about the possibility of Nigeria entering into co-production with France, opened the discussion on how filmmakers can relay sensitive information without offending the sensibilities of government and the people.

    The panel had Charles Novia recalling how Nollywood started at a time when Nigeria was under the military government, and how some of its narratives had aided the return of democracy in Nigeria. Unfortunately, it has not been a walk in the park for filmmakers to air their critique of politics and the public service under the current democratic dispensation.

    While Novia also blamed the dearth of revolutionary filmmaking on the laziness of filmmakers to employ literary allusions in bringing government heresies to the fore, Obi Asika noted that, apart from the fact that government may frown at its critics, there is a lot of self-censorship going by our cultural orientation. According to him, the world seems to have ran out of original story ideas, thus, many hide under the excuse of institutional censorship. “If you have any story to tell, tell it, and don’t be afraid,” he said.

    Prompted by this discussion, I realised that, in actual fact, Nigerian films of today is deficient in record of satire, as we had among the earlier filmmakers. Even using film as direct confrontation to bad governance is a rarity. One can only wonder how much references would be available of revolutionary films, if the late Afrobeat founder, Fela Anikulaop-Kuti was a filmmaker.

    In the face of harsh government policy and censorship of motion picture works, filmmakers in other clans, as I often say, have found their voices in exile. This was what many thought Ishaya Bako would do when his documentary, ‘Fuelling Poverty’ was outlawed by the government of Nigeria through the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB).

    Bako was probably silenced by patriotic spirit. He would do nothing further like route a revolutionary film at international film festival or go into a co-production with foreign agencies just to wash the country’s dirty linen on the global stage.

    Well, let’s just say that what works for one man may not work for another. Otherwise, Sudanese filmmaker, Hajooj Kuka, wouldn’t have ‘defeated’ Omar al-Bashir at the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) in 2015.

    It was one of those cases of film in exile, and it earned Kuka a reward when his documentary film, ‘Beats of the Antonov’, which depicts al-Bashir, not just as the kind of leader who drops bombs on unarmed civilians, but also as a racist who divides his country along racial and ethnic lines, won the Artwatch Africa laurel.

    The artiste has been winning awards for the daring film that shows the vicious treatment the citizens are facing in the hands of the country’s leader.

    That showcase at DIFF, occurred barely a month after Omar al-Bashir escaped detention in South Africa, following International Criminal Court (ICC)’s order.

    However, Kuka’s documentary says it all, giving a human face to al-Bashir’s victims at that Durban film fest and earning nods from viewers and judges at the festival. His plaque was accompanied by a R15, 000 cash prize (equivalent of N234, 230 then) in honour of an African film that meaningfully engages with issues of Freedom of Expression.

    Let’s take a look at another fighter; the embattled Iranian filmmaker, Jafar Panahi, who won the Golden Bear at Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) few years back, for his Tehran road movie, ‘Taxi’, which critics described as a victory for freedom of speech and the art of cinematic storytelling.

    The dissident filmmaker, who was banned from making films by the Iranian authorities and forbidden from travelling abroad, starred in his own film as a taxi driver, talking to his passengers as he drives them through the streets of Tehran.

    Berlinale’s decision to celebrate Panahi didn’t stem from a perception of affront to the filmmaker’s country.

    “Instead of allowing his spirit to be crushed and giving up, instead of allowing himself to be filled with anger and frustration, Jafar Panahi created a love letter to cinema,” said Darren Aronofsky, the American director and Berlinale jury president. “His film is filled with love for his art, his community, his country and his audience.”

    Although committed to a six-year prison term and a 20-year ban from filmmaking by the Iranian government, the filmmaker has continued to be celebrated on the international stage.

    I can recall that Panahi’s film, ‘Offside’, won the Berlin festival’s Silver Bear award in 2006 and in 2011. But he was prevented from attending the ceremonies because he could not get bail to attend.

    His film, ‘Taxi’ was the first after his jail term, which again, has been described as his courage against his 20-year ban from filmmaking.

    Well, I see more of a politicised film industry in the democratic setting, especially one that has enriched some Nollywood filmmakers from the loot of public office holders, as a result of which the revolutionary spirit may have been fed fat and unmoving.

  • THE WOMEN:  FAST AND  FURIOUS OF  A DRAMA

    THE WOMEN: FAST AND FURIOUS OF A DRAMA

    I have seen well-intended get-together of friends turning awry in movies like ‘Family Album’, ‘Truth Hall’, and perhaps, ‘Waiting to Exhale’ – they are all tragicomedies of dirty secrets, causing unprecedented diminishing return at the rise of fun.

    Omo (Ufuoma McDermott) must celebrate her 40th birthday, no matter what it takes. Hell is let loose when Teni (Omoni Oboli) discovers her husband is the secret sponsor of her friend’s birthday. Omo, down and fearing no fall, spills the milk of secrets supposedly covered in a delicate calabash, smearing, not just Teni, but Ene (Kate Henshaw) and Rose (Katherine Obiang), who, in Omo’s estimation, are Teni’s accomplices.

    Although Blessing Egbe’s ‘The Women’ is one of those stories, it has been able to stand out with ‘dissimilar resemblance’.

    ‘The Women’ may not claim to be an outright comedy, it does more than an intersperse of comic reliefs, and with considerable good pace, Egbe blows hot and cold in 90 minutes, leaving us on the edge of our seat.

    In favour of a director’s creative license, it is safe to say that although Egbe’s familiar style as a TV series producer robs on this movie effort, it is finely garnished by a smart pace that dishes riot and fun in one breathe. More so, this is a golden age in storytelling, and I guess what determines a great production is content, not genre.

    Because ‘The Women’, a familiar theme, is intelligently done, it warms its way into us with a refreshing storyline, good acting, smart jokes, and some shameful revelations uncovered at the point of jollification.

    During the daring moment that punctured their fun, everybody must go down with Omo, unless there is one without blemish. That is what Teni gets for casting the first stone… how well are the husbands able to handle shocking confessions of covetousness, adultery, child abuse, mental health issues and all- well, we didn’t see the world coming to an end here, yet we didn’t get the impression that Egbe is eulogizing vices.

    In ‘The Women’, the filmmaker didn’t just hit us with the tragic element, the buildups make for a progression that prepares the viewer for the bomb, and how you know a good movie is, even when the suspense is not so watertight, you are still stunned by the outcome.

    Egbe strikes me as a story teller and gifted director, because ‘The Women’ delivers on a good script, and smart visual interpretation.

    If she lost it anywhere, and seemingly so, the fifth lady and model at the getaway event, is a distraction, as her character is to the story, giving us an inkling of a series whose sequel could bud from her scene in the whole drama.

    And apart from a few sound glitches too, there is more to take home from ‘The Women’.

    It is interesting to note that Femi Branch (Ayo, husband to Rose), who has the tendency to overact, keeps it decent and fitting, even in his vernacular lines. Give it to all the male actors whose roles are not dwarfed by the fire brand ladies: Talk of Kalu Ikeagwu – (Bez, husband to Teni); Gregory Ojefua (Chubby, husband to Ene) and Anthony Monjaro (Maro, husband to Omo).

    While indeed all actors are in the lead role, it is safe to say that with the anchor character Omo, Ufuoma McDermott was in her element. The way I have never seen her in any movie…

  • THE WOMEN: FAST AND FURIOUS OF A DRAMA

    I have seen well-intended get-together of friends turning awry in movies like ‘Family Album’, ‘Truth Hall’, and perhaps, ‘Waiting to Exhale’ – they are all tragicomedies of dirty secrets, causing unprecedented diminishing return at the rise of fun.

    Omo (Ufuoma McDermott) must celebrate her 40th birthday, no matter what it takes. Hell is let loose when Teni (Omoni Oboli) discovers her husband is the secret sponsor of her friend’s birthday. Omo, down and fearing no fall, spills the milk of secrets supposedly covered in a delicate calabash, smearing, not just Teni, but Ene (Kate Henshaw) and Rose (Katherine Obiang), who, in Omo’s estimation, are Teni’s accomplices.

    Although Blessing Egbe’s ‘The Women’ is one of those stories, it has been able to stand out with ‘dissimilar resemblance’.

    ‘The Women’ may not claim to be an outright comedy, it does more than an intersperse of comic reliefs, and with considerable good pace, Egbe blows hot and cold in 90 minutes, leaving us on the edge of our seat.

    In favour of a director’s creative license, it is safe to say that although Egbe’s familiar style as a TV series producer robs on this movie effort, it is finely garnished by a smart pace that dishes riot and fun in one breathe. More so, this is a golden age in storytelling, and I guess what determines a great production is content, not genre.

    Because ‘The Women’, a familiar theme, is intelligently done, it warms its way into us with a refreshing storyline, good acting, smart jokes, and some shameful revelations uncovered at the point of jollification.

    During the daring moment that punctured their fun, everybody must go down with Omo, unless there is one without blemish. That is what Teni gets for casting the first stone… how well are the husbands able to handle shocking confessions of covetousness, adultery, child abuse, mental health issues and all- well, we didn’t see the world coming to an end here, yet we didn’t get the impression that Egbe is eulogizing vices.

    In ‘The Women’, the filmmaker didn’t just hit us with the tragic element, the buildups make for a progression that prepares the viewer for the bomb, and how you know a good movie is, even when the suspense is not so watertight, you are still stunned by the outcome.

    Egbe strikes me as a story teller and gifted director, because ‘The Women’ delivers on a good script, and smart visual interpretation.

    If she lost it anywhere, and seemingly so, the fifth lady and model at the getaway event, is a distraction, as her character is to the story, giving us an inkling of a series whose sequel could bud from her scene in the whole drama.

    And apart from a few sound glitches too, there is more to take home from ‘The Women’.

    It is interesting to note that Femi Branch (Ayo, husband to Rose), who has the tendency to overact, keeps it decent and fitting, even in his vernacular lines. Give it to all the male actors whose roles are not dwarfed by the fire brand ladies: Talk of Kalu Ikeagwu – (Bez, husband to Teni); Gregory Ojefua (Chubby, husband to Ene) and Anthony Monjaro (Maro, husband to Omo).

    While indeed all actors are in the lead role, it is safe to say that with the anchor character Omo, Ufuoma McDermott was in her element. The way I have never seen her in any movie…

     

  • Davido and co:  No thanks to alcohol

    Davido and co: No thanks to alcohol

    I intend a pun of how the death incidents that have trailed pop singer, David Adeleke, aka Davido, in the last one week are turning out. Pardon me if this offends sensibilities in view of the departed souls; life itself is such an ‘irony’.

    In case you’re just reading this for the first time, three acquaintances of the rave singer died in mysterious circumstances – within one week. The first, which is causing more uproar, was about Tagbo Umeike, who, according to autopsy, died of suffocation. The other two friends – DJ Olu and Chime were found dead in a car, few days after.

    To what many would call a suspicious coincidence, Tagbo may have been suffocated to death inside his car, going by the lead given the police from a whistle blower and actress Caroline Danjuma who claimed she was affianced to the deceased.

    Caroline who is known for some controversial altercations with celebrities was right afterwards, but not many saw it that way when she first called out Davido, insisting that the singer knew more than meets the eye.

    But for the actress, who gave the police a lead, we probably wouldn’t know the extent to which Davido and his other friends were involved in the circumstances under which Tagbo passed.

    That aside, 40 shots of Tequila, as reportedly consumed by Tagbo on the eve of his demise, is capable of leading any man to self-slaughter. Caroline was wrong there – a man is capable of the unexpected. Tagbo proved this, albeit posthumously, and Caroline must be too stunned to argue. How could she? Tagbo isn’t alive to claim witnesses lied.

    Perhaps it doesn’t matter now that Tagbo drank to stupor, “why did you do it?” could have been Caroline’s next question. And he could have made her happy by confirming it wasn’t for the money. Yes, Caroline claimed he hailed from a wealthy family, and didn’t need a bet of N200, 000. And I bet, Tagbo could have said to her, ‘I did it for fun’.

    I doubt that Caroline’s hard feeling towards Davido means that she wants him to dance naked; my diction for life imprisonment, the worst penalty for manslaughter, should it be ascertained that Tagbo died as a result of the carelessness of Davido and company.

    I guess she merely wanted Davido to confirm what she already knew about how Tagbo died. She didn’t claim he killed Tagbo, but it was worrisome to her that the singer should feign ignorance of the situations leading to his death.

    Now that we all know, according to the police, that Davido lied because he probably didn’t want anyone linking him to his friend’s passing, what would the police charge him for, and what would be the verdict of the court of law?

    If you ask me, Davido is at the mercy of the police. It doesn’t matter what fans and foes of the singer think. The police as forerunners in this case will determine, to a large extent, what the outcome of the case will be in court – if it ever gets to the court at all.

    Whatever the outcome of this matter, lessons must be learned. Youths, whether in showbiz or other endeavors must be cautioned about the slippery nature of their age. Alcohol must be condemned in the reckless form that the late Tagbo, Davido, and friends abused it.

    If Tagbo was not so drunk, he probably would not have been locked up in the car as claimed, to the extent of suffocation. If his friends were not drunk too (irrespective of the degree), ‘their second’ sense would be active to know that it is dangerous for Tagbo to be locked up in the car (whether or not it was the deceased that pressed the lock button). The remote cause is the sorrow and regret that now pervade the air.

    Concerning the late DJ Olu and Chime, autopsy is what everyone is waiting for, and we are sure to learn a lesson or two from their misfortune too – who knows?